Title: Lecture 3: Paradigms and Contemporary Issues
1Lecture 3 Paradigms and Contemporary Issues
How the Disciplines Future can Explain its Past
2INTRODUCTION A. Issues and Goals
- Contemporary psychology is ambiguous
- It is diverse, with old tensions and new currents
- Diversity Psychology is broad tent of theories
and approaches. - Psychologists in many WSU departments other than
Psychology. - Old Tensions The old tensions between scientific
psychologists and those who are nonscientific or
applied remains. - History of Clinical Psychology very revealing!
- New Currents New movements extend ideas but
increase diversity and tension in the field.
3INTRODUCTION B. Connecting Psychology Past to
its Present
- The contemporary picture looks nothing like it
should! - Ideally, contemporary psychology should be the
progressive result of disciplines history. - Progressive means a philosophically rational
process of conceptual change - Newer paradigms resolve anomalies of older ones.
- A general progressive account of the history of
psychology has not been accepted. - There are progressive accounts of local changes,
which ironically may come from applied psychology
(mental testing, diagnostic techniques, treatment
outcomes) whose scientific status has been
questioned.
4INTRODUCTION B. Connecting Psychology Past to
its Present
- One account holds that there is a progressive
sequence between three forces in psychology. - Psychoanalysis (First Force) 1890 -1930s
- We all succumb to the will of an all powerful
unconscious - Behaviorism (Second Force) 1930s -1960s
- Humans are like all other animals in being pawns
of the environment - Humanism (Third Force) 1960s -
- Humans are naturally good and naturally strive to
be the best.
5INTRODUCTION B. Connecting Psychology Past to
its Present
- Another account holds a progressive relation
between three paradigms. - Mentalism 1879
- Psychology born as a science of consciousness
using introspection (Wundt, Titchener) - Behaviorism 1913
- Rejected the science of mental life in favor of a
science of behavior (Watson, Pavlov) - Cogntivism 1956
- Science of behavior for a computational
(information-processing) science of mind
(Lashley, Chomsky, Simon, Miller)
6INTRODUCTION C. Problems with Conceptual
Revolutions
- Leahey (1992) was skeptical that either sequence
reflects a conceptual revolution. - The Behaviorist ascension in the early 1920s was
not a fight against (or replacement of) another
paradigm - Multiple paradigms existed and flourished early
in the 20th Century. - Mentalism (conscious mind)
- Functionalism (purposive actions)
- Psychoanalysis (unconscious influences).
- A methodological not ontological debate.
7INTRODUCTION C. Problems with Conceptual
Revolutions
- Even the changes in the 1960s may not reflect a
paradigm shift. - To Leahey, cognitisms ascension represented
mentalisms marriage with behavioral issues. - Cogntivism did not replaced behaviorism but
represents continued basic work of mediated S R
models - Also, old mentalism on such issues of sensation,
perception, and attention was augmented with new
work on language, reasoning, and decision-making.
- Humanistic psychology did not replace behaviorism
but offered other treatment options than behavior
modification.
8INTRODUCTION C. Problems with Conceptual
Revolutions
- Koch (1982) was skeptical of the validity of any
progressive model to account of psychologys
history.
9INTRODUCTION C. Problems with Conceptual
Revolutions
- He argued that any ordering of the history of
psychology was morally bankrupt.
10INTRODUCTION D. The Present in an Historical
Perspective
- a broad progressive account connecting
psychologys past to its present is premature. - What gets written about psychologys past depends
on whether or not the diversity, tensions, and
new currents are ever reconciled. - The greater diversity and tensions introduced by
new currents may force unification or more
disunity. - We will consider whether psychology is on a
pathway towards unification or disunity. - The account of psychologys history may depend on
how the future resolves.
11II. DIVERSITY OF PSYCHOLOGY A. State of the APA
- American Psychological Association (APA) is the
national organization of psychology. - Founded in 1892 with a handful of charter
members. - Today there are 85,000 members who can be
registered in 54 divisions representing diverse
areas of interests and specialties. - The history and present state of the APA reveals
much about the discipline. - No hostility among the different schools of
thought in APA, reflecting a spirit of eclecticism
12II. DIVERSTY IN PSYCHOLOGY B. Tensions
- The diversity of psychology also creates tensions
which include - Science versus Application in psychology
- The focus on science vs. practice may be
naturally irreconcilable in psychology due to
personality and conceptual issues - History of Clinical Psychology in the APA
- There has been a long tension between applied and
scientifically oriented psychologists in the APA. - The Training of Clinicians
- The APA standard of scientist-practitioner
training (Ph.D.) is being challenged by Psy.D.
degrees.
13III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY A. Science vs.
Application
- The goals of science vs. application are
antagonistic - Applied psychologists focus on practicing
psychology in order to heal or help people. - Scientists are focused on testing ideas in order
to prove them right or wrong. - But in medicine, medical doctors who treat people
are also biomedical scientists. - But medical doctors and biomedical scientists may
each accept the disease or medical model which is
not universally shared in psychology.
14III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY B. Science vs.
Application
- The tensions between practitioners and sciences
are old! - From its inception, there was always a tension
those wanting psychology to be a pure science
(Wundt, Titchener) and those wanting
psychological applied to practical matters (such
as Hall, Cattell, and Münsterberg). - The founding of the APA did not decrease this
tension. - Titchener refused to participate in any of APAs
activities. - He created his own organization, The
Experimentalists
15III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY C. Practitioners
vs. Scientists
- Temperament differences between practitioners and
scientific psychologists. - James (1907) divided philosophers into
- Tender-minded (Principled, Intellectualistic,
Idealistic, Optimistic, Religious, Free-will,
Dogmatic) temperament - characterizes members of the humanities (Snow,
1984) - Tough-minded (Fact-based, Sensationalistic,
Materialistic, Pessimistic, Irreligious,
Fatalistic,Skeptical) temperament - characterizes scientists (Snow, 1984)
- Because of the differences, communication between
the two groups is challenging.
16III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY C. Practitioners
vs. Scientists
- Other differences between practitioners and
scientists in psychology. - Kimble (1984) found that experimental
psychologists tend to be tough-minded and
humanistic psychologists and psychotherapists
tend to be tender-minded. - Dawes, Faust, Meehl (1989) identified different
ways clinicians and scientists make judgments and
decisions. - Consider how you would prefer to be evaluated for
a grade in the course - Subjective judgments of the professor.
- Objective evaluation of course performance
(tests, etc.)
17III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY C. Practitioners
vs. Scientists
- Dawes et al., (1989) characterized the difference
in terms of the methods each prefers to make
judgments and decisions. - Clinical judgments are performed in ones head
often using intuitive knowledge, clinical
impressions, or subjective reactions - Actuarial or Statistical judgments rest solely on
empirical relations between data and the
condition or event. No intuitions, impressions or
reactions just using data to make judgments.
18III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY C. Practitioners
vs. Scientists
- Differences found between the methods
- Goldberg (1972) found that clinical judgments
were correct 62 whereas actuarial judgment were
correct 70 of the time when making distinctions
between psychosis vs. neurosis. - Even training the clinicians in the actuarial
rules did not improve their performance. - Clinicians were unreliable in their patterns of
judgments. - Leli Filskov (1970) studied the diagnosis of
brain dysfunction based on intellectual testing. - The statistical judgments was correct 83 of new
cases but clinicians were correct 63
(experienced) and 58 (inexperienced) of the new
cases,
19III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY C. Practitioners
vs. Scientists
- Why are clinical judgments worse than actuarial
ones? - Actuarial procedures, unlike clinical ones,
always lead to the same conclusion for a given
data set. - Factors as fatigue, recent experience, or
seemingly minor changes in the ordering of
information or in the conceptualization of the
case or task can produce fluctuations in
judgment. - Actuarial methods ensure that variables
contribute to conclusions based on their actual
predictive power and relation to the criterion of
interest. - Actuarial decision rules eliminate the
non-predictive variables, and weight predictive
ones in accordance with their independent
contribution to accurate conclusions.
20III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY C. Practitioners
vs. Scientists
- Why clinical are worse than actuarial judgments
- Clinicians often obtain little or no information
about the accuracy of judgments. - Clinicians often can not find out whether they
are right and outcomes are easily distorted
(Rosenhan, 1972) - On this note, clinical judgments produce
"self-fulfilling prophecies." - Prediction of an outcome often leads to decisions
that influence or bias that outcome (32). - Clinicians are exposed to skewed samples making
it difficult to determine relations among
variables. - Co-occurrence of certain features (EEG
abnormalities) in a skewed sample (only juvenile
delinquents) does not make the feature a
predictive of that sample.
21III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY C. Practitioners
vs. Scientists
- Clinicians are over-confident about their
clinical judgment. - Research shows that clinical judgments are made
with more confident than their accuracy warrants
(Dawes, 1998) - Faust et al., (1988) found that most clinicians
were quite confident in their diagnosis although
not one was correct. - An anti-actuarial claim is that group statistics
dont apply to single individuals or events. - Although individuals and events may exhibit
unique features, they typically share common
features with other persons or events that permit
predictive power. - By this logical, one would be willing to play
Russian roulette with a gun having a single or
multiple bullets.
22III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY D. History of
Clinical Psychology
- In 18th C America, mental illness was seen as an
acute illness, curable if therapy was early. - The first mental asylum in the US was open in
1750s in Philadelphia. - Practiced moral therapy which involved
individually tailored activities. - By mid 1950s, asylums (now state hospitals) were
disbanded as they had became warehouses of failed
patient management. - Research to promote therapy and diagnosis in
asylums began in the late 1880s. - Mental testing in asylums and out becomes
popularized by J. M. Cattell R. Jastrow.
23III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY D. History of
Clinical Psychology
- 20th C marks the beginning of clinical
psychology. - Clinical Psychology coined in 1907 by Witner who
also edited journal Psychology Clinic. - Mental testing, specifically intelligence
testing, by psychologists becomes widespread
during WWI. - Freud and Jung visited Clark University in 1909
and gave lectures about Psychoanalysis. - MDs believed that psychotherapy should be
practiced exclusively by doctors. - Social movements brought attention to mental
health issues (National Committee for Mental
Hygiene).
24III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY D. History of
Clinical Psychology
- Clinical Psychology became a part of the American
Psychology Association (APA) in 1919 - APA Founded in 1892 as a society to promote the
science of psychology. - Clinicians were not welcomed and later withdrew
for a period of time, creating their own
association - It is not until 1944 that APA fully embraced
clinical psychology, becoming responsible for
clinicians credentialing and training
requirements - To reconcile with clinicians, APA changed its
stated purpose to include psychology as a
profession and a means of promoting human welfare.
25III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY D. History of
Clinical Psychology
- APA addressed its new responsibility for
credentialing and training clinical psychologists - David Shakow chaired an APA committee to create
the curriculum. - The committee completed a report in 1947 which
contained a set of undergraduate and graduate
curriculum recommendations for clinical
psychologists. - The 1947 statement made clear that clinical
psychology is both a science and an art calling
for scientific rigor tempered by personal and
social sensitivity.
26III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY D. History of
Clinical Psychology
- But university Psych Depts. were reluctant of
have APA control their curricula. - Harvard, Columbia, and others still have Clinical
Programs in their School of Education (Ed.D vs.
Ph.D.) - A 1949 meeting was held in Boulder Colorado to
implement the new curriculum. - Shakow and 73 others representing universities
and other disciplines hammered out a set of
specific proposals for the training and practice
of clinical psychology. - The resulting view of psychological practice was
the Boulder (or Scientist-Practitioner) Model.
27III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY D. History of
Clinical Psychology
- The agreed upon Boulder Model was designed to
insure that clinical psychologists - use scientific methodology in their practice
- work with clients using scientifically valid
methods, tools, and techniques - inform their clients of scientifically-based
findings and approaches to their problems - conduct practice-based research.
28III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY D. History of
Clinical Psychology
- There remains a split between psychologists
oriented to clinical vs. scientific aspects of
the discipline in the APA.
APA continued to evolve into an
organization in which the applied members began
to outnumber the research-oriented psychologists.
29III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY D. History of
Clinical Psychology
- In the past, it was the clinicians in APA who
were unhappy, now it is the scientists. - In the 1960s, a group of scientific psychologists
left the APA and formed their own organization - The Psychonomic Society
- In 1989 another group of psychological scientists
organized the APS (American Psychological
Society) - APS is now called the Association for
Psychological Science. - This tension between practitioners and scientists
is no better today as it was 120 years ago!
30III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY E. The Ph.D. vs.
Psy.D Degrees
- Clinicians have pushed back!
- Clinicians have some not-so-kind thoughts about
the value of the scientific training in the
Boulder Model. - These clinicians argue that same person should
not be trained in applied pure work. - There is no valid reason for clinicians to train
in pure science. - They do little science once becoming clinicians
- Talent and interest in applied work is
incompatible with talent and interest in
scientific work. - The scientist-practitioner model does not produce
many scientist-practitioners.
31III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY E. The Ph.D. vs.
Psy.D Degrees
- The scientist-practitioner model may be the
problem! - There is no evidence that handful of research
courses in graduate school are sufficient to
develop competent scientists. - Clinical- and science-oriented professors in
Boulder Model schools do not value clinically
oriented research (the topic of interest to
clinical students). - The scientists think that the research lacks
sufficient controls . - The clinicians think that controls that are
exerted makes the research invalid. - Not many scientist-practitioners in the
profession.
32III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY E. The Ph.D. vs.
Psy.D Degrees
- Clinicians do not dismiss science!
- Everyone agrees that clinical psychology need a
solid background in the basic science. - Such background is trained in undergraduate and
graduate psychology courses (Methods and
Statistics) - However, the question is whether clinicians
should conduct their own research as required by
the schools employing the Boulder Model. - They distinguish between those who want to find
generalities about all people (scientists) and
those who want to help a person (humanist).
33III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY E. The Ph.D. vs.
Psy.D Degrees
- Some conclude that political forces (not sound
reasons) was the cause of adding a research
requirement to the Boulder Model. - An alternative to the Boulder model was first
instituted at the University of Illinois in 1968 - Instead of a science-practitioner model, the
alternative was a scholar-practitioner model - The model proposed training psychologists without
the research requirement. - The tents of the new model were ratified at a
meeting in Vail Colorado in 1973, - The Vail Model promoted a professional program
like other disciplines.
34III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY E. The Ph.D. vs.
Psy.D Degrees
- Several features differentiate the Vail from
Boulder models - Training is more strongly focused on clinical
practice that either of the other two. - The programs usually grant a Psy.D. degree rather
than a Ph.D. or Ed.D. - Admissions criteria may place more of an emphasis
on personal qualities and clinically-related work
experience. - These programs are housed in a greater variety of
institutional settings than are research
scientist or scientist-practitioner programs.
35III. OLD TENSIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY E. The Ph.D. vs.
Psy.D Degrees.
- The students interested in psychology is left to
decide between two types of programs. - The different programs designate the scientist
role (Ph.D.) from the practitioner role (Psy.D.).
- Acceptance rate for students are higher in Psy.D.
(40) than Ph.D. (13) programs. - Psy.D. offers less financial assistance than
Ph.D. programs and students graduate with more
debt. - Students in Ph.D. programs graduate later than
students in Psy.D. programs. - PsyD graduates do not perform as well as PhD
graduates on the Examination for Professional
Practice in Psychology (EPPP).
36IV. NEW CURRENTS IN PSYCHOLOGY A. Sources of
New Ideas
- New ideas come into psychology a variety of
places which include - Technological innovations
- These technologies provide measurement accuracy
and even metaphoric applications. - New funding priorities
- New research open new investigations and
theories. - New intellectual traditions
- These can be from outside or inside psychology
- There has been some of each in the last couple of
years in psychology
37IV. NEW CURRENTS IN PSYCHOLOGY B. Technological
Innovations
- Technological changes include computer
technologies and biomedical equipment. - Supercomputing alternative to the serial computer
- Parallel Distributive Processing models of
cognition and reasoning became popular in the
1990s, which provide analogues of neural networks
(Dual Process Theory). - Brain scanning and gene sequencing technologies
provided new ways of examining biological basis
of behavior. - MRI and FMRI allow real time brain scanning of
various activities to better understand mind body
relations. - Gene sequencing allows for better understanding
heritability.
38IV. NEW CURRENTS IN PSYCHOLOGY C. Funding
Changes
- New funding focus on Positive Psychology
- Positive Psychology is the scientific study of
the strengths and virtues that enable individuals
and communities to thrive. - Research on happiness and other positive
emotions, resilience, living the good and
meaningful life. - It began in1998 when Martin Seligman, the father
of the modern positive psychology movement, chose
it as the theme for his term as APA president and
found financial support to promote research. - Extension of the Humanistic and Phenomenological
perspective in psychology.
39IV. NEW CURRENTS IN PSYCHOLOGY D. Intellectual
Currents
- Postmodernism is a movement from the Social
Sciences and Humanities - Postmodernism, or social constructionism, holds
that reality is created by individuals and
groups within various personal, historical and
cultural contexts. - truth is always relative to cultural, group,
and personal perspectives. - The socio-cultural contextual view in psychology
is largely based on postmodernism.
40V. FUTURES OF PSYCHOLOGY A. Issues
- How the diversity, tensions, and current trends
of contemporary psychology are addressed will be
a basis to define the past. - One the one hand, with greater diversity and
tension, there is more of a opportunity to unify
psychology. - Phenomenon-based inquiry will allow for the unity
of multiple perspectives (Sternberg Grigorenko,
2001) - Biopsychosocial models have address complex
interactions between multiple incompatible
variables. - Psychological theories adopt different design
stances so collectively they view human beings as
multipurpose.
41V. FUTURES OF PSYCHOLOGY A. Issues
- But the future may hold greater disunity
- Some disunity trends accelerating Separated
psychology departments. - Most would agree that psychology is still a
fragmented collection of different facts,
theories, assumptions, methodologies, and goals. - James assessment in 1885 holds true today. This
is not a science, only a hope for a science. - But now, not all psychologists adopt a
deterministic view of human beings, necessary for
a unity-in-science view of the discipline.